Macro algae spreading

BlackTip

Active member
Alkalinity: 9dkh
Calcium: 440
Mag: 1400
Phosphate: .03
Nitrate: 2 parts

I change and vacuum sand bed every week. The water is crystal clear. Nothing growing on the glass. Diatom and cyano are gone weeks ago.

I have macro algae spreading through the rock. Small patches everywhere. Manual removal causes more problems, because I believe they spread faster this way. Some of the algae looks like bryopsis algae, and other type is similar but more stalky. I ordered Kent Magnesium couple of weeks ago, and I am still waiting on delivery.

My question: Why are they spreading, if there is very little nutrient in the water? How can I stop or slow the spread?

Thanks,
 
Some algae is very adept at getting by on very low nutrient levels. I had some bryopsis a few years ago on a rock. I pulled the rock and killed it off then put the rock back in.
 
Some algae is very adept at getting by on very low nutrient levels. I had some bryopsis a few years ago on a rock. I pulled the rock and killed it off then put the rock back in.

I wish I did that the first time I saw it. I thought it could be food for herbivore. It is too lat for me now. They are everywhere...:(
 
I wish I did that the first time I saw it. I thought it could be food for herbivore. It is too lat for me now. They are everywhere...:(

I wouldn't necessarily say that. It all depends on what kind of tank and what the residents of said tank are. You can always pull the rocks out one at a time over the course of several days (weeks?), and kill off the algae on that rock.
 
IF it happens to be macro algae in your aquarium,(and not the nuisance type algae),and you want it removed ,most Fox Face rabbitfish ,will eat it.
 
Running GFO to get rid of the phosphate or carbon dosing to get rid of both nitrate and phosphate will help. Low nutrients will still spread nuisance algae. Only 0 nutrients won't. If it's bryopsis, which it sounds like it might be, you're already on the right track by ordering the Mg. Raise that up to 1550-1600 or so for a bit and that should help kill it off.
 
Thanks guys.

What I have are Bryopsis and another type that look like Bryopsis but without the leafs. I just couldn't identify it, and get a photo proved to be too difficult.

I do run GFO. I am at the end of the life cycle of this patch, so the phosphate is a little higher. New patch is going in next week, but I don't think this will change anything. The phosphate and nitrate are already in the low side. I know some believe 0 reading for both is ideal. I don't think .03 and 2ppm is a big deal, however. I have LPS, SPS, and softies.

My next group of fish will have either a tang or a foxface, but that will take at least 3 more month. I already have fish in the QT, so I have to wait until I move them to the DT, and then get more fish.
 
Back
Top